She told the Sun Online that although metal detecting is moving into the 21st century, women can still face push-back from the dedicated treasure hunting community.

Jocelyn said: "I was hesitant to start metal detecting. I was twenty-six years old and far from your typical hobbyist. Most people envision a man in his sixties sweeping the beach for spare change.

"For the most part, the detecting community is helpful and inviting to newcomers. But once you're submersed into the hobby, you catch a glimpse of the uglier side. There's a lot of competition and the hobby can be cut-throat at times.

"It's especially rough being a woman - I feel like I have to prove myself even more, because everyone is so focused on what I'm wearing or what colour my hair is."

Treasure in the English countryside

Detectorists in England have found all sorts of gems lurking beneath our green and pleasant land.

Back in 2008, Michael Darke and Keith Lewis found 840 Iron Age gold coins in a Hampshire field, earning them £79,000 apiece.

A 2010 find in a field in Somerset earned Dave Crisp £231,000 for the hoarde of 50,000 coins.

In 2014, student Tom Lucking found a piece of Anglo-Saxon jewellery in East Anglia which was so rare and elaborate it was deemed a find of "national significance."

The same year, Derek McLennan found a trove of 10th-century Viking relics valued at around £2 million while scanning near Dumfries.

A year later, peniless Paul Coleman unearthed a haul of 5,000 Anglo-Saxon silver coins in Buckinghamshire, earning him £500,000 after splitting the find with the landowner.

But even if she does face criticism from some of the men in the community, Jocelyn has found a legion of fans online, where her YouTube videos have earned her a sponsorship to travel around the world with her camera and metal detector.

Her clips, often vlogs of her hunts for treasure, are filmed all over America and Britain, where young detectorists are flocking for a chance to dig up their own piece of our rich history.

And Jocelyn isn't the only young woman who has realised that the most lucrative treasure is lurking online.

One of the most successful detecting channels on YouTube belongs to Texas-based Diggin Britt, a light-hearted treasure hunter who boasts 98,000 subscribers and her own line of Diggin Britt merch.

Meanwhile, Digger Dawn, a detectorist who combs the English countryside in her vlogs, runs a channel with 6,000 subscribers, and is among hundreds of smaller - but growing - channels like NRCR Diggers, all run by female treasure hunters.

Elsewhere, regulars on detectorist blogs are starting to uncover more women talking about their finds, and offline you're more likely to bump into a woman combing a field for coins than ever before.

Harry Bain, editor of Searcher magazine, estimates that at least 30,000 Brits are involved in the hobby, with an increasing number of women among them.

She said: "You’re seeing more and more women out in the field and the women are often better than the men – they are more meticulous.”

Maybe they're jealous of the women's successes in the field, but the blokes aren't always that accommodating.

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YouTube detectorist Jocelyn, who now has two kids to look after as well as a hobby to juggle, said: "The male hobbyists sometimes have a hard time taking me seriously when I'm not decked out in camo from head to toe.

"They seem to think that wearing camo makes it easier to sneak up on the relics.

"But I've noticed a lot more females joining the hobby. They reach out to me because I think they feel a certain connection. We are the minority and we have to stick together."